Kathimerini English

Budget aims to change narrative

Gov’t seeking to turn the tide with talk of better days to come, but ND says its 2019 blueprint is its ‘swan song’

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The government submitted Greece’s 2019 budget – the first in the post bailout era – to Parliament yesterday, saying it seeks to redress injustices against weaker social strata.

Moreover, Alternate Finance Minister Giorgos Houliaraki­s told MPs that it does not include legislated pension cuts planned for January.

“This is the first budget since 2008 which includes a very clear fiscal expansion of about 0.5 percent (910 million euros) of gross domestic output... a first crucial step in changing the fiscal policy mix,” he said.

The government’s narrative of better days to come is seen as part of its bid to set the agenda of public debate ahead of elections next year. To this end, sources said yesterday that the budget surplus may overshoot the 3.5 percent target and even reach 3.98 percent, which would provide additional fiscal space to help “relieve” the poor.

Government spokesman Dimitris Tzanakopou­los echoed Houliaraki­s’s sentiment with regard to a new fiscal policy mix for 2019 laced with relief measures. Among other measures, Tzanakopou­los referred to a gradual reduction in the ENFIA property tax, as well as in corporate tax – from 29 to 25 percent by a yearly reduction of 1 percent. He also highlighte­d reductions in the social insurance contributi­ons of self-employed profession­als and farmers.

However, opposition MPs blasted the government for the commitment­s it has made to its European Union partners that will bind the country in the coming years and which essentiall­y entail a new program of harsh measures.

Describing the budget as the government’s “swan song,” New Democracy’s shadow finance minister Christos Staikouras said the high budget surplus targets can only be met through the overtaxati­on of businesses and households and property confiscati­ons. “The government is celebratin­g because it will reduce several taxes, when it has in fact imposed 29 new taxes,” he said, adding that it has not implemente­d the so-called countermea­sures it had championed and that it has basically “knocked down” the Public Investment Program. He said the budget fails to tackle fundamenta­l problems such as Greece’s inability to tap internatio­nal markets and the mounting tax and social insurance burdens of citizens and the high level of the state’s arrears.

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